OPINION
This is a special action from a decision of the superior court granting relief in a special action. By order, we previously accepted jurisdiction and granted relief. This opinion explains the reasons for our order.
This case concerns the qualifications of a contractor to bid on a City of Phoenix construction project. The issue is whether the contractor was qualified to bid when it held only a Class A contractor’s license at the *437 time it bid, and it obtained the required Class B license after it submitted a bid but before the contract was awarded. Resolution of this issue turns on whether the substantial compliance doctrine applies in this situation. The superior court granted relief on a com-' petitor’s petition for special action and directed the City of Phoenix to reject the contractor’s bid.
We accepted jurisdiction because the imminence of the contract award rendered the remedy of appeal inadequate and because the issue is one of importance to the construction industry in this state.
The facts are as follows. The petitioner, Pierson Construction Corporation, submitted the low bid to the City of Phoenix for work involving water line and service replacement. Real party in interest Eleven Construction, Inc., was the next low bidder.
At the time of its bid, Pierson held a Class A general engineering license. See Ariz.Rev. StatAnn. (“A.R.S.”) § 32-1102(2). After submission of bids, but before the award of the contract, the Registrar of Contractors opined—apparently for the first time—that a Class B residential and commercial license is required for some portions of the work involved in this project. 1 Soon thereafter, Pierson applied for and received both a Class B residential and a Class B-01 commercial license. 2
Before the contract was awarded, however, Eleven filed a protest with the city urging that Pierson was unqualified because it possessed only the Class A license at the time it bid. After the city rejected the protest, Eleven filed a petition for special action with the superior court. The superior court granted relief and barred the city from accepting Pierson’s bid.
We hold that Pierson is qualified because it substantially complied with the contractor licensing statutes. We first examine what the statutes required of Pierson, and then analyze Pierson’s compliance with those requirements.
The controlling statute is A.R.S. section 32-1151, which provides:
It is unlawful for a person ... to engage in the business, act or offer to act in the capacity, or purport to have the capacity of contractor without having his own license in good standing in his own name therefor as provided in this chapter, unless the person ... is exempt as provided in this chapter____
This statute bars anyone from bidding on a contract—“offering] to act in the capacity ... of contractor”—without a license.
Urbatec v. Yuma County,
We now consider whether the doctrine of substantial compliance nevertheless makes Pierson a qualified bidder. Of special import is our supreme court’s recent decision in
Aesthetic Property Maintenance, Inc. v. Capitol Indem.,
In
Aesthetic,
the contractor’s license was suspended by operation of law when it inadvertently failed to renew the license. It completed a subcontract while suspended, and entered into another subcontract before it had the license reinstated.
Id.
at 75-76,
The court then applied several factors to determine whether the subcontractor had substantially complied:
Did the Registrar’s failure contribute to noncompliance?
... Was the contractor financially responsible while its license was suspended?
Did the contractor knowingly ignore the registration requirements? ... Did the contractor, immediately upon learning of the license suspension or other statutory noneompliance, apply to reactivate the license or remedy the statutory violation?
... Finally, did the failure to comply with our statute prejudice the party the statute seeks to protect?
Id.
at 77,
Aesthetic establishes that substantial compliance can be adequate under section 32-1153. Two questions remain: First, does the doctrine of substantial compliance also apply to section 32-1151? Second, are the factors that establish substantial compliance present in this case? We answer both questions in the affirmative.
Substantial compliance applies to section 32-1151 because the purpose of that provision is the same as the purpose of section 32-1153: to protect the public from unscrupulous, unqualified and financially irresponsible contractors.
Applying the factors enumerated in Aesthetic affirms that Pierson’s compliance with the licensing statutes was substantial. Pierson at all times possessed a Class A license. No suggestion is made that at any time it had failed to maintain financial responsibility. Pierson had failed to comply with Section 1151 by holding a Class B license only because a Class B license had not been thought necessary before the Registrar’s contrary opinion. That opinion was rendered only after Pierson had submitted its bid. When Pierson discovered the omission, it promptly obtained the necessary license. Finally, the City of Phoenix is not prejudiced by Pierson’s temporary failure to fully comply. In fact, just the opposite is true: If Pierson is disqualified, the city must pay more for the work because Pierson was the low bidder.
Accordingly, we hold that Pierson substantially complied with the contractor’s licensing statute. For that reason, we grant the relief that Pierson requests and vacate the superi- or court’s order.
Notes
. The Registrar of Contractors has the responsibility of adopting rules and regulations necessary to classify contractors, and it may limit the contractors’ field and scope of operations. A.R.S. § 32-1105;
City of Phoenix v. Superior Court,
. See Ariz.Admin.Code ("A.A.C.”) tit. 4, ch. 9, R4-9-102(B) for the scope of a Class A General Engineering license and a Class B-01 General Commercial Contractor license. See A.A.C. tit. 4, ch. 9, R4-9-103 for the scope of work that may be performed with a Class B General Building Contractor license.
